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| <nettime> Deft Critique of Laurie Anderson's Habeas Corpus |
[1]http://www.publicseminar.org/2015/10/the-guantanamo-saga-in-laurie-andersons-
habeas-corpus/#.VikgCNbQVD7
The Guantánamo Saga in Laurie Andersons Habeas Corpus
[2]Jeremy Varon [3]October 22, 2015
On a brilliantly sunny, fall afternoon, a dozen members of Witness
Against Torture a grassroots group long dedicated to closing the
prison camp at Guantánamo broke from our marathon strategy meeting to
see the GTMO-themed installation of the renowned performance artist
Laurie Anderson. Titled Habeas Corpus, the groundbreaking exhibit was
up for just three days, from October 2-4, in New York City. Invited to
attend by Guantánamo attorneys who had collaborated with Anderson, we
were eager to see what a gifted artist would make of subjects in which
we had become reluctant, amateur experts.
The trek uptown felt like traversing both social worlds and centuries.
Our starting point was the dilapidated auditorium of Maryhouse, the
fabled East Village headquarters of the radical nun and founder of the
Catholic Worker movement Dorothy Day. Commended by Pope Francis in his
address to the US Congress, Day enjoys newfound fame. Yet Maryhouse
stands as a defiant holdout of a disappearing New York. Frayed posters
from generations of political struggles hang from its walls, while
stacks of the Catholic Worker newspaper, still sold at the
Depression-era price of a penny, dot the floor plan.
Our destination was the resplendent Park Avenue Armory in an achingly
posh stretch of the Upper East Side. Converted with the aid of
seven-figure gifts into a state-of-the-art exhibit space, it seemed an
incongruous vessel for a topic so grim as torture at a dusty island
gulag.
Entering the exhibit was to be transported again. A huge disco ball
hung suspended in the dark, cavernous hall dark. Amidst the undulating
dollops of its reflected light, one had the sensation of floating in
outer space. The thrum of expertly toned guitar feedback, engineered by
Lou Reed collaborator Stewart Hurwood, enveloped the room. Live
musicians drifted about to create impromptu accompaniment. One heard
singing evocative of a muezzins call to prayer, classical strings,
something like a North African bagpipe, and Andersons own work on the
electric violin.
The space was ethereal, eerie, and absolutely beautiful. My immediate
comparison was to Dream House, the sublime sound-and-light installation
currently on view at Manhattans Dia:Chelsea. (Combining minimalism and
psychedelia, and with its shag carpet floor, it feels equal parts
gallery, cathedral, and retro stoner den.) As my senses melted into
trippy pleasure, my discomfort with Habeas Corpus stiffened. The
precise risk the exhibit courted was aestheticizing or even falsifying
something wicked. With terrible irony, the sensory deprivation of
enhanced interrogation converts into sensory delight. Confinement
yields to expansiveness. Nothing about the prison in Guantánamo, my
political mind protested, should inspire this kind of art, dreamily
enjoyed by connoisseurs of the urban avant-garde.
Any chance of extended reverie or confidence in the fairness of this
criticism, however, was disrupted by the exhibits focal point: the
massive, three-dimensional image of Mohammed el Gharani. Originally
from Chad, el Gharani was sent to Guantánamo in 2002 at age 14. He was
freed seven years later after being tortured in various settings.
Filmed at an undisclosed location in West Africa, el Gharani was beamed
in real time into the Armory, where he sat still on a sculpted chair.
El Gharani himself could observe the spectators observing his image.
Those released from Guantánamo are forbidden from entering the United
States. By means of Andersons hi-tech wizardry, el Gharani thus
achieved what no former detainee has been able to do: to appear in the
United States in an immediate, near-corporeal way. While el Gharani
took scheduled breaks from his hours of sitting, pre-recorded audio
testimony about his ordeal played over his empty chair.
El Gharani was present, absent, and never really there. With this
haunting effect, Habeas Corpuscomplicates its own message, while
opening up multiple readings of its aesthetic. Hopeful but muddled,
Habeas Corpus mirrors the irresolution of the reality it seeks to
represent.
You Shall Have the Body
Much of the exhibits substance owes to its interplay with its title,
Habeas Corpus. Habeas corpus has a special place in American law and in
the legal and moral landscape of the war on terror. The term
translates, as the exhibit materials explain, into you shall have the
body. Formally originating in the Magna Carta, it was regarded by the
United States founders as an essential bulwark against tyranny. No
authority, habeas dictates, can throw you into secret, incommunicado
detention. Instead, the captor must present the prisoner (the body)
before a competent tribunal to determine the legality of his detention.
Different from a criminal trial judging guilt or innocence with respect
to a specific charge, habeas challenges the initial act of
imprisonment. Indeed, the vast majority of the nearly 800 men who have
been held at Guantánamo have never been charged with crimes.
Whether the Guantánamo detainees had habeas rights for years dominated
legal and political wrangling over the prison. The Bush administration
notoriously insisted that the detainees, by virtue of being held on
leased, Cuban territory and ascribed the novel status of enemy
combatants, had no such rights. Facing pushback from the courts, it
concocted in 2004 the Combat Status Review Tribunals as a pitiful
stand-in for due process. The sham proceedings traded in secret,
fanciful evidence often obtained under the duress of torture. As this
system sputtered, a Republican Congress legislated away habeas rights
for the detainees.
The detainees status as non-persons also dominated years of
anti-Guantánamo activism. The signature motif at demonstrations has
been figures dressed in the detainee uniform of an orange jumpsuit and
black hood. Especially when displayed at shrines of American democracy
in Washington, D.C., the ghostly icons indict the myth of American
fidelity to the rule of law with the reality of brutal, lawless
detention.
Witness Against Torture has dramatized with special force the denial of
the Guantánamo detainees as juridical subjects vested with rights. In
January 2008, just when the Supreme Court was considering whether they
had habeas protections, we held a mass arrest at the Supreme Court
building. To the arresting officers, many of us gave the names of
individual detainees in lieu of our own. The detainees names, to our
happy surprise, were entered into the court docket. At our subsequent
trial, we were able to give the detainees a symbolic version of what
they had been refused to that point: their day in a US court. Some
defendants prefaced each statement by indicating that they were
speaking on behalf of a specific prisoner. Others maintained total
silence so as to register the inability of the detained men to speak on
their own behalf.
We Hear You and See You
Only with its June 2008 Boumediene decision (announced shortly after
our conviction on misdemeanor charges) did the US Supreme Court
definitively rule that the prisoners at Guantánamo had a Constitutional
right of habeas corpus. Long-filed habeas petitions soon reached
federal judges, with the presumed power to set free those unjustly
bound. El Gharanis petition was heard in 2009 and decided in his favor
by US District Judge Richard Leon. Reproduced in excerpts in the thick,
over-sized exhibit booklet, his ruling oozes with contempt for the
governments flim-flam case. The unclassified versions of other early
habeas rulings, publicly available but rarely read outside of small
legal circles, expose the ludicrous nature of many detentions. Merely
publishing Judge Leons ruling in such a high-profile context is itself
a public service.
Andersons Habeas Corpus shows at least a simulacrum of el Gharanis
body. Doing so, it nearly fulfills the essence of the legal concept,
distilled to a literalism. The whole exhibit can be read as the
digitized telling of a legal-ethical pun. In the installations signal
moment of triumph, el Gharani narrates his watching Judge Leons ruling
on closed circuit TV in Guantánamo. His guards jump for joy as they
explain to him that he has won his case. Though hardly a tribute to the
US legal system, the exhibit suggests that the near-broken wheels of
justice can still turn. We behold the smiling, adult el Gharani, surely
wounded by his captivity but free.
This spectacle was especially resonant for one among our crew, Luke
Nephew of the Peace Poets. Nephew was part of the 2008 Supreme Court
arrest. He had taken as his detainee name Mohammed el Gharani, and he
carried the identity with him at future protests. Captured on YouTube,
Nephew can be seen signing off as Luke Nephew, aka Mohammed el Gharani
after a stunning performance in 2011 outside the US Department of
Justice of his poem [4]There is a Man under that Hood. The poem
intones, To the detainees / no matter how broken and shattered and
tortured you feel / there are people in these United States / who hear
you and see you / who know that you are real.
Without quite knowing it, the installation spoke to years of activist
efforts to represent the detained men, both in their legal erasure and
their humanity. As if in dialogue with Nephews poem, Habeas Corpus
permits us to hear and see el Gharani. In this light, the exhibit hall
exists as a de-territorialized anti-Guantánamo in the abstract realm of
the law. Its solemn beauty radiates the wonder of el Gharanis return
from oblivion.
A Trophy in the Library
But theres a rub. No federal judge has freed anyone from Guantánamo,
including el Gharani. Boumediene may have granted habeas rights. But
the Supreme Court did nothing to mandate that the US executive branch
act on the judges rulings. As a result, many detainees successful in
their petitions continued to languish in Guantánamo. As habeas attorney
Sabin Willett wryly put things: A fellow wins his case against the
government and the remedy is for the court to say to the jailer, please
will you do something about it? By April 2011, Willett pronounced
Boumdiene a [5]trophy hanging in the library, impressive and lifeless.
Worse, the Obama administration eager to limit the power of the courts
appealed unfavorable rulings. The result was not only the reversal of
individual judgments but the dramatic revision by conservative judges
of how such cases are adjudicated, stacking the deck against the
petitioners. An October 2011 appeals court ruling in the case of Adnan
Latif a mentally troubled man from Yemen whom the Department of
Defense itself had years earlier recommended for release established a
presumption of regularity in consideration of evidence submitted by the
government. This standard, [6]in the view of a dissenting judge, comes
perilously close to suggesting that whatever the government says must
be treated as true.
Latifs attorneys filed for the Supreme Court to reconsider his case and
the broader mess that habeas had become. In June 2012 the court
declined. By September, Latif was dead, presumably by suicide. His
attorneys attributed his death to his despair over never leaving
Guantánamo. Latifs body, to extend Willetts metaphor, hangs next to the
Boumediene trophy.
Meanwhile, the Obama administration promoted a second path for release
from the prison, the Guantánamo Review Task Force. Comprising the
military, law enforcement, and intelligence agencies, the Task Force
has designated more than 100 detainees as cleared for transfer after
cautious review of each case. But this is a security classification,
not a legal judgment, equally powerless as habeas to ensure ones actual
freedom. The release in fits and starts of 123 men under Obama has in
each instance been a political decision, entangled in geo-political
calculation, transfer diplomacy, partisan combat, and struggles over
the separation of powers. [7]Fifty-four men cleared for transfer remain
at the prison. It is a strange form of tyranny when the tyrant
continues to hold prisoners whom it declares it wants to free.
Dream House
None of this history is decipherable in Habeas Corpus, with profound
implications for the piece. The exhibit creates a false picture by
suggesting that Judge Leon freed el Gharani. A work of art is not a law
lecture, and too heavy a pedagogic burden crushes arts spirit. One may,
moreover, present a moral truth while scrambling the facts. But much of
the devil of Guantánamo has always been in the details. The checkered
journey of habeas here matters. Bringing it to mind in the vast hall, I
began again to see its beauty as deceptive.
But inspecting the el Gharani corpus in detail, I experienced a final
reversal of feeling and judgment. His projected body appears less
substantial the closer one gets to it. It rests awkwardly on its
three-dimensional chair. The limbs flatten and grow out of proportion,
verging on grotesque. We see only a distorted spectral image of el
Gharani, not the man himself.
The body is withheld even as it is shown. This double move in an
exhibit in warring dialogue with itself captures the fraught status of
habeas corpus as a matter of law for the detainees. Fast-moving text
projected opposite El Gharani enhances the exhibits self-questioning.
We see disjointed bits of his testimony traveling from left to right,
which one therefore reads backwards: between its the; you, Americas
the; America North know; a after are we where; it months couple; for
difficult was; days first the. Even spun forwards, the fragments barely
cohere.
I took this confusion as a sign both of the trauma el Gharani suffered,
as well as the shattered syntax of the law at Guantánamo. It has not,
and cannot, be made whole. Habeas Corpus becomes its own dream house,
containing dream and nightmare both, the transcendent promise of the
law fulfilled and the cruelty of a mirage.
Casting ourselves out of this netherworld into fading sunlight, we
wound our way back downtown to sit at beaten wooden tables, amidst
fraying political posters, to imagine what it would mean to really see
el Gharani.
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